Slate reports that, according to the documents, funds to detain thousands more children would be taken from the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program, which makes medical care more accessible for more than half a million uninsured and underinsured people each year. According to the program’s website, it currently reaches approximately 52% of all people diagnosed with HIV in the United States. The money taken from the HIV/AIDS program would reportedly be used by the ORR for possible scenarios where up to 25,400 more children are detained by the end of 2018, according to Slate. That’s more than twice the current number of children now being held.

“This envisions having further family separation cases coming to HHS—a lot of them,” Mark Greenberg, the former head of Health and Human Services’ Administration for Children and Families under President Obama, told Slate. Greenberg also told Slate that the documents show that the ORR might also increase federal expenses for handling unaccompanied and detained children, with the current appropriation for the year at $1.3 billion. Greenberg notes they are seeking an additional $1.3 billion for the last three months of 2018 to continue detaining children. Slate reported that, per the documents, the ORR may be short approximately $1.9 billion for the period between October 1, 2017 and December 31, 2018, if taking into account maximum possible expenditures.

This news comes after Trump signed an executive order in June, mandating that undocumented families be detained together, rather than separating parents and children.

Reportedly, the internal documents also show that in addition to possibly taking money from an HIV/AIDS program, and requesting additional funding from Congress, HHS plans to reallocate approximately $79 million from programs for refugee resettlement, according to Slate. Taking that much money away could seriously endanger critical programs for refugees, which include social services, medical assistance, and English language instruction, on top of treatment programs for torture survivors, Slate reported.

The documents, which are exercises to prepare for potential scenarios and not plans set in stone, appear to assume that the executive order signed by Donald Trump, which created a 20-day pause on family separations, ending Tuesday, July 10, may be merely that — a pause. The documents reportedly estimate an additional 9,100 could be detained by the government in the next month.

Teen Vogue did not immediately get a response from the ORR to a request for comment on this story.*